Crossing the Rubicon and Handling Setbacks

Great read on either being 'all-in' and crossing the river, or staying one side indecisive. I thought you would like it. Not that I think it relates to anything specifically in your life right now, or maybe it does. But to me you've been a person who has crossed the river and therefore despite the discouraging times, you still rise to conquer.

Noah

Setbacks discourage me.

There, I’ve said it. I’ve admitted that I, Angela Duckworth, scholar of grit and admirer of all things excellent, wouldn’t score 5 out of 5 on one of the original Grit Scale items.

But it’s true. I do get discouraged. Doubt is no stranger. The thing is, I eventually get up again. I fall seven and rise eight.

What is the psychology of being “all-in”? Why do some people get discouraged, retreat, and then, as a result, see their prophecy of failure fulfilled? Why do others get discouraged and, eventually, redouble their effort, thereby increasing the odds that they will succeed?

The difference between being all-in versus anything else comes down to whether you’ve crossed the Rubicon.

As you may know, the Rubicon is the river Julius Caesar crossed in 49 BC against direct orders from the Roman Senate not to do so. Crossing the river was a decision that, as an unambiguous act of treason, could not be reversed.

Being all-in means you’re fully committed to your goal. You’re no longer weighing the pros and cons of your dreams. Instead, you’re figuring out how to make them a reality. In an all-in frame of mind, setbacks--however painful and discouraging as they may be, particularly in the moment--are reframed as lessons learned.

My guess about paragons of grit is that, like anyone else, they once wondered to themselves, Can I do this? Why should I do this? Why shouldn’t I? Everyone, includingAlex Honnold and Roger Bannister and Serena Williams, must have questioned, at some point in their journeys, whether they were aiming too high, or even pointing in the wrong direction altogether.

But one day they crossed the Rubicon. Afterwards, they asked, How can I do this? When and where can I take action? Why isn’t what I’m doing working, and what do I need to do differently?

Last week, a few Characters and I sat down and reviewed new Grit Scale items for the upcoming Grit Playbook. I re-read everything, thought carefully, and changed only one.

Everyone gets discouraged. Everyone cries, sometimes. But some of us cross the Rubicon. When we do, we can admit our mistakes and be honest about our self-doubt. And we can say, without reservation: